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Sunday, March 29, 2015

New Windham Police chief confirmed by town council - By Michelle Libby


Twelve Windham police officers including Chief Rick Lewsen sat in the audience of Tuesday night’s town council meeting as Kevin L. Schofield was named and confirmed as the new Windham police chief. Schofield will replace Lewsen at the end of April. 
 
Schofield is currently the police chief in Bridgton, Maine, where he has been for four years. 

“I’ve known him for a while,” said Lieutenant James Boudreau. “He’ll be a positive influence to drive us forward with a lot of innovation.” 

Schofield has also worked in Topsham and spent 21-years in Brunswick taking advantage of the opportunities he was presented like working as a detective, as an officer and finally retiring at the rank of commander. 

“He brings a lot of vision and follow-through. We’re excited as a department,” said Sgt. Bill Andrew.
Fifty people were involved in the five month search for the right candidate. “We wound up in a very good place,” said town manager Tony Plante. “We are in the process of transition. We’ll look forward to the next chapter of the Windham Police Department.” 

Schofield had been thinking about Windham as a career opportunity, when the position was advertised. “I knew I’d have a lot of support here. I can’t tell you how excited I am. You’re not going to regret your decision,” he told the council. 

Schofield has an associate’s degree in criminal justice, a bachelor’s degree in business administration, a Master of Science degree in organizational leadership and executive certification from the Maine Criminal Justice Academy. 

“It was heartwarming to see that kind of support,” he said about the officers in the audience. “It was also nice for the chief to come up to make a statement.” 

He described the police department staff as “high quality that cares about the department.”

Windham’s unique location and the way it has been marketed to the public made the position more interesting to him. There has been steady growth in the community over the years and he sees himself fitting in well with the continued managed growth projected, he said.   

“We’re very, very excited about this,” said DARE officer Matt Cyr. “I think he’ll be all over this town.”

One of Schofield’s main areas of interest is community outreach and youth. He has worked in the schools as a school resource officer and a DARE officer. He worked jointly with the YMCA to create programs for eighth graders and kids that are being rehabilitated or are at-risk. 

“I have a lot of energy and a lot of ideas,” Schofield said. His philosophy is to support his staff and to set them up to succeed with the right equipment, from computers in cars, in car cameras and good working radios. He did all of this in Bridgton to put them in a good situation for transition. “That drives me as an administrator,” he said. He wants to provide tools for folks to do their jobs well. 

He plans to spend the first month or two analyzing. “We will take vision, channel energy, set goals and achieve those goals,” he said. “Windham Police Department doesn’t know life without Rick Lewsen. We will honor that legacy. We will work as a team and as a department.” 

When asked what his dream job was, he said, “I put my resume in for my dream job.” And, now it is his.
Schofield is married and has two adult children. He and his wife plan to move to the area later in the year.
“He’s going to be a great chief,” Lewsen concluded. Lewsen has been with the Windham Police Department since its inception in 1976 and has been the chief since 1991.






Aubrie Froisland continues JSMS dynasty by winning InvestWrite competition - By MichelleLibby



Last week fifth-grader Aubrie Froisland from Raymond was recognized at a small ceremony at Jordan-Small Middle School for winning the SIFMA Foundation and McGraw Hill Financial InvestWrite Competition for the State of Maine. 

Her parents, Diana and David, and sister, Haley, were snuck into the school and the assembly so they wouldn’t give away the winner. “I can’t believe I didn’t spill the beans,” said Diana, who knew the results for months because the announcement kept being put off because of bad weather. 

Aubrie won for the fall essay competition in the elementary grades 4 and 5. She was asked to explain the benefits of long term investing. 

Aubrie didn’t realize she had won until she saw her parents, she said. “I know it’s not me. I didn’t’ have a clue,” she said. She did really well with the Apple stock she chose.  

Teacher Jack Fitch has been doing the Stock Market Game with his classes for 20 years. “SIFMA Foundation has been terrific. At parent conferences they want to talk about the stock market. The best stocks I have in my portfolio I have from my kids,” said Fitch. For the last five years, JSMS has had a winner every year from the InvestWrite competition, he said. 

Participation in the Stock Market Game has increased 85 percent in Maine, said Elizabeth Reidel, a vice president for SIFMA Foundation, who traveled to the school to present Aubrie with a certificate, trophy and balloons. 

“We appreciate how much time and effort they are putting in,” Reidel said. The National competition is fierce at 8,140 entries judged by experts in the finance industry. 

Although Aubrie said she probably won’t enter again, it’s mostly about not liking the attention, more than the essay writing. In her free time, she likes to read and run cross country.




Sunday, March 22, 2015

Local high school artists recognized at Portland Museum of Art for Youth Art Month - By Michelle Libby


Holden Willard, a sophomore at Windham High School from Raymond, had a piece of his art work from a drawing 1 class selected to be displayed at the Portland Museum of Art for the 21st Annual Youth Art Month.
 
“The project was based on a unit where the students were studying perspective. Holden was chosen based on his skill and understanding of the subject matter and his creative talents as an artist,” said Willard’s art teacher Kim Chasse. His art work is titled “Apocalyptic Sunrise.” (It’s hanging in the PMA Lobby near the elevators.)

Approximately 100 pieces of art work in grades kindergarten to 12th from all over Maine were submitted for nomination. 
 
The exhibition, sponsored by the Maine Art Education Association (MAEA) in partnership with the Portland Museum of Art, provides a forum for acknowledging the imagination, innovation, and creative skills that a visual arts experience can nurture. Youth Art Month, observed annually in March, emphasizes the value of art education for all youth and encourages support for quality school art programs, according to a press release from the museum. Not limited to students in southern Maine, last year’s exhibition represented 119 students from 11 counties in Maine.

Abigail Connor, a junior at Windham High School, was also selected for the program. She is enrolled in Advanced Studio Art with teacher Jeff Bell.

Abigail's artwork is part of a series of drawings that represent a collaboration with a friend who writes the stories that inspire her characters. Her drawings are digitally rendered using a drawing tablet connected to her laptop. Bell said that he “recognized the skillful and fluid quality of Abigail's drawings and feels that she brings these characters to life with sensitivity and great expression.”
 
“This drawing is a portrayal of a young student standing before her teacher, a forbidding authority figure who hands her a book and demands that she ‘Learn’,” said Bell. This fall, Abigail will be enrolling in Advanced Placement Studio Art where she will continue to build her already impressive portfolio of work, he added.





Windham Public Library tea celebrates 10 years - By Michelle Libby


For 10 years, librarians Barbara Keef and Laurel Parker have been hosting Tea for You @ Your Library at the Windham Public Library. They have held 80 teas, had 2,236 plus people sign the guest book and have served more than 4,500 cups of tea. With a different theme every tea, the patrons who stopped by and the guests who came to socialize, enjoyed the tea and snacks provided by the librarians. 
 
On Tuesday, the library once again pulled out the china tea cups for a gathering. However at this tea, the library and all of the guests, from town councilors to the new fire chief, attended to celebrate 10 years of community teas at the library. Keef and Parker were honored with Mad Hatter headbands and plants.
The Friends of the Windham Library provided money for cut up fruit and cakes to be dipped under a chocolate fountain. This was an especially big hit with the teens just getting out of school. The friends also provided the other snacks and paper goods.
“We’ve had so many bars and cookies (over the years), including Laurel’s huge layer cake,” said Keef.  
Ceil Clark from Cumberland, raised her children in Windham and lived here for 37 years. “I’ve been to all of them,” she said, taking a sip of her tea. Others had never been to the tea and decided to check it out Tuesday. The afternoon knitting group procured a table off to one side of the room to knit while snacking and drinking tea, hoping for more interest in their library group.
A slide show played throughout the tea, showing pictures of many of the events over the years. “If we did not have this tea we would not have the pictures of the people who have passed away,” said Parker. There were pictures of children having tea with older community members, talking about whatever the theme of the tea happened to be.
“We are building community with the tea,” said Parker. All ages come to the tea and find people they haven’t seen for years.
There is a list of all the teas, notable people who attended and what was served. On average the teas draw about 40 participants, but according to Parker, who remembers a tea where no one showed up and all of the staff at the strawberry shortcake and fresh whipped cream, there are “always new people coming.”
New themes are always up for discussion as is who will make which homemade snack to share. From King Cakes for Mardi Gras and election day cakes for voting days, the library goes all out.
The tea gatherings also were the reason for the new chairs and the round tables that were added to the meeting room, Parker said. “People didn’t like the long tables,” she said. The money for the tables and chairs came from an endowment that was left to the library from Fran and Paul Vogel. Parker called their daughter to tell her what the library decided to do with the money and she couldn’t imagine a better way to spend the money, Parker said.
As the teas progressed, more and more tea cups were donated. Now the eclectic collection gives everyone the choice of shape, pattern and style. One cup became known as “May Lunt’s cup” because she had to have the same cup every tea. When she no longer could come to the tea, Keef and Parker gave the cup to her to have at home.
As Parker surveyed the gathering on Tuesday, she smiled. “This has fulfilled our purpose.”
The teas take place every six weeks. The next Tea for You @ Your Library is on April 28th.


The tea also presented the perfect venue to unveil the new 3M Cloud Library for Windham Public Library card holders. Library director Jen Alvino said that the library is advancing technologically and since the introduction of the Minerva interlibrary loan system, this was a good next step. 

There will now be a 3M Discovery terminal upstairs at the library to be used to select books for a mobile device that uses apps, like iPads, Kindle Fires and Nooks. Readers were encouraged to download the 3M Cloud Library app from an Android or iTunes app store to use the service. If using the terminal, just scan a library card and the book will show up on the app for that user. Right now there are about 250 titles that can be taken out for two weeks each. 

“It’s new and exciting,” said Alvino to the crowd that has gathered. The library will also be getting Nook lowlight devices for patrons to check out for use at home. There are only three other libraries in Maine with this 3M service, Camden, Scarborough and Mt. Blue. 

When Alvino started the library she described it as “walking into a library and having nothing on the shelf.”
 
The library is looking for businesses to sponsor shelves in the virtual library. 

“This is why you’re the best librarian in the state,” said library volunteer and friend of the library Sherry Andre, who stood at the terminal with Alvino. 

The new system is up and running now.